42 .;." The New Lure , \ of Chiffon ' done by Rudolf... \ '. ) butterfl)' sleeves, ..... ;;) lacy detailed bodice, softly draped cummerbund. . . azure blue, I sandalwood, navy or black. Szzes 10-18 110.00 , " > \ \ If c9> 1P I If East Orange, N.J. MONTALDO'S Charlotte, Wtnston-Salem, Greensboro, Durham, N. C. · Richmond, J1z. · St. Louis Denver. Colorado Springs · Bartlesville, Okla. · Hot Sþrtngs, Ark. · Columbus, Ohio -- - The smart man gives the smart woman an M M bag , <\. " <# Easter faille, navy or black, about 16.00. G. Fox & Co.,L. L. Berger, Inc., J. L. Hudson COio,J. W. Robinson Co. schoolmaster, but It fitted him like a glove: Tommy is a holy man. He goe to Mass on Sunday; He prays to God to give him strength To slap the boys on Monday. With Downey the cane was never a mere weapon; it was a real extension of hIs personality, like a musician's in- strument or a ventriloquist's dummy- something you could imagine his bring- ing home with him and reaching out for in the mIddle of the night as a man reaches out for his wife or his bottle He sent the boys for canes on approval, and tested them carefully, swishing them and peering at them for flaws, and when one broke in his hand, as hap- pened occasionally when he was flog- ging some slow child about the bare legs, one glance was enough for him to size up the possibilities of the two pieces and carryon the joh with the likelier one. When, in those odd moments of recollection that afflict the most consci- entious of floggers, he stood at the front door and looked out at the spring sun- shine with a puzzled frown, as though wondering what it was doing there without his permission, he still kept the cane clutched close to his spine, where it continued to wave gently from side to side as though, like a dog's tail, it had a life of its own. Frequently I carried a boy's paper in my satchel, and Downey watched me closely, because he kne"T my weakness for glancing at it under my desk as a man in mortal agony will glance at a crucifix. Once he caught me with a pa- per called The Scout, and grabbed it ta hold up before the class with a roar of glee. "Ho, ho, ho! Look who we have here' Look at our young scout! Ho, ho, ho ! We'll soon knock the scouting out of you! Hold out your hand, you bttle puppy! " The religious instruction in that school never fel] below the high stand- ard of secular instruction set by Do"T- ney. The preparation for First Com- munion was entrusted to a well-to-do old lady from Summerhill, who wore a black bonnet and cloak such as my grandmother wore on state occasions. She came to school with a candle and a box of matches, stuck the candle on the desk before her, and lit it. Then she put half a crown be.side the candle, and after we had watched these fascinating preparations for a sufficiently long time, she offered to give the half crown to any boy who would hold his finger- only one finger-in the candle flame for five mInutes. Then, having studied us,